Programs

DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE

In 2005, The Illinois Justice Project (then part of Chicago Metropolis 2020) along with other advocate groups, worked to separate the Youth Division from the adult functions of the Illinois Department of Corrections and to create a new Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ).  After about 18 months of policy design and work with the General Assembly and the Governor’s Office, the new IDJJ was created.

For the past two decades, policymakers from both political parties in Illinois have worked together to reform the juvenile justice system.  Guided by the results of research on adolescent brain development and recommendations of national experts emphasizing the importance of providing ways to change behaviors of youth in their home communities, Illinois enacted policies and programs that has greatly reduced the number of youth held in state prisons.

Illinois Justice Project Juvenile Redeploy
Did you know?

Thanks to the Redeploy Illinois program, commitments to the Department of Juvenile Justice have been reduced by 53%, resulting in $88 million cost avoidance for the state of Illinois. St. Clair County reduced prison commitments from 86 to 11 in its first year participating in the program.

Illinois Justice Project Youth Shackling
Did you know?

After Florida’s Miami–Dade County limited shackling, more than 20,000 youth appeared in court without shackles between the years 2006 and 2011. During that period, no child escaped, nor were any court personnel harmed in an escape attempt.

Resources

The Justice, Equity, and Opportunity (JEO) Initiative convened a group of subject-matter experts to advance Illinois’ adoption of a more trauma-informed and healing-centered justice system.

Reallocating state resources to develop more effective, less expensive community-based alternatives to incarceration and improve access to interventions that reduce crime.

Redeploy Illinois seeks to decrease youth incarceration in Department of Juvenile Justice through evidence-based community programs that maintain public safety and promote positive outcomes for youth.

Justice Divided is an educational tool and resource repository meant to promote awareness of disproportionate minority contact (DMC), or the overrepresentation of black youth in the juvenile justice system.

An advisory group responsible for administering federal juvenile justice grants, ensuring compliance with the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, and advising the Governor and General Assembly on matters of juvenile justice.